GOWDAGowda, H.D. DEVEDevein full Haradanahalli Doddegowda Deve Gowda ( born May 18, 1933 , Haradanahalli, Holenarasipura taluka, Karnataka, India, in full Haradanahalli Dodde Deve Gowda, Mysore [now Karnataka], IndiaIndian politician and legislator who served as chief minister of Karnataka from 1995 1994 to 1996 and as prime minister of India from June 1996 to April 1997.

Born in into a Vokkaliggas Vokkaligas family, Gowda herded sheep after school and studied by candlelight. After graduating in civil engineering he worked as a road contractor. In 1953 he joined the Congress Party, resigning in 1962. Elected to the Karnataka state legislative assembly in 1962, he was raised in that subcaste’s agricultural tradition. He earned a degree in civil engineering in 1952 from a polytechnic school in Mysore state (which was renamed Karnataka in 1973) and then worked as a contractor. He was a member of the Indian National Congress from 1953 to 1962, when he abandoned the party and was elected to the Mysore state legislative assembly. He served as a member of the assembly for four consecutive terms, during which he became known as a champion for the disadvantaged.

Gowda was imprisoned during the Indian Emergency (1975–77; the period when Prime Minister Indira Gandhi suspended the constitution and ruled by decree). In the 1980s he served as Karnataka’s minister of public works and irrigation, and in 1991 he was elected to the Lok Sabha (the lower chamber of India’s parliament). Over the course of the next several years, he worked to bring greater attention to the plight of agrarian communities.

In 1994 Gowda assumed leadership over the Janata Dal party and became Karnataka’s chief minister. In the parliamentary elections held in 1996, the United Front , (a Janata Dal-led 13-party coalition) formed a government at the centre with the support of the Congress (I) Party in order to prevent the Bharatiya Janata Party from coming to power. Gowda , who was then the chief minister of Karnataka, was sworn in as the new prime minister. However, Gowda’s reign His tenure, however, was short-lived. In April 1997 the Congress (I) Party withdrew its support to for the coalition. The reason proffered given was that, although Gowda’s minority United Front government was dependent upon the Congress, the prime minister did not consult the party regarding important matters. On April 11, 1997, Deve Gowda lost a no-confidence motion in the Lok Sabha by 292 votes to 158, electing a wide margin; Inder Kumar Gujral, then minister for external affairs, was chosen as the coalition leader.

Gowda was later elected to the Rajya Sabha (Council of States; 1996–98) and was reelected to the Lok Sabha for multiple terms.